NL Central

NL West

Now Commenting On:

San Francisco’s Slaughter honored with the 2012 Fishel Award

Email

Print

Press Release |

Nashville, TN -- Staci Slaughter, the Senior Vice President of Communications for the San Francisco Giants, has been named the recipient of the 2012 Robert O. Fishel Award for Public Relations Excellence, presented this evening during the Baseball Winter Meetings.

The Robert O. Fishel Award, named after the longtime baseball executive, goes to the "active, non-uniformed representative of Major League Baseball whose ethics, character, dedication, service, professionalism and humanitarianism best represent the standards propounded by Robert O. Fishel." Fishel, an executive with the Cleveland Indians, the St. Louis Browns, the New York Yankees and the American League Office, was the inaugural winner of the Award in 1981.

Slaughter oversees the Giants’ media relations, public affairs, marketing communications programs, social media and community outreach activities and serves on the franchise’s Management Committee. A member of the organization since 1996, Slaughter has helped manage the Club’s jewel events and the accompanying media operations, including for the 2000 opening of AT&T Park, the 2007 All-Star Game, three World Series (2002, 2010, 2012) and two World Series Championship parades in the last three years. She also has handled the Club’s response to unique challenges on and off the field throughout her tenure. The University of California-Berkeley graduate plays a key role in the Club’s charitable endeavors, including the team’s partnership with the Willie Mays Boys & Girls Club at Hunter’s Point, the 100% Player Participation Program and the Giants Community Fund.

Before joining the Giants, Slaughter was the press secretary to former San Francisco Mayor Frank Jordan, serving as his primary media liaison, spokesperson and speechwriter. She has been a resident of San Francisco for more than 20 years. Staci and her husband Jamie have two sons, Jake and Ben.

Fishel Award nominees are submitted by the 30 Major League Clubs and league officials. The nominees are voted upon by active past winners, MLB officials and the Baseball Writers’ Association of America.